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#11 (permalink) | |
Horribly Creative
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: London, The Big Smoke
Posts: 8,265
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Page 59-64
Richard Marx- In many ways Richard Marx kept the AOR flag flying in the late 1980s and early 1990s, as by then the genre as a major commercial draw had long since died. I like listening to Richard Marx's songs individually, but over an album they lack diversity and he often demonstrates everything bad about the AOR/soft rock genre with his reliance of ballads and overly commercial material. One of the main reasons I always followed his discography, is that one of his main writing collaborations was with Fee Waybill the frontman of the Tubes and an old idol of mine, he often sings backing vocals on some Richard Marx stuff as well. The Steve Lukather link is no surprise, because if you wanted real guitar quality on your songs, he along with Neil Schon were the best two around. Tom Petty- Now Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers were great on their first five albums, it was after that though that they started to embrace the heartland rock and southern rock which I really dislike, so I more or less stopped listening to them and Tom Petty's solo stuff around that time. Now their first albums were great, Long After Dark probably not as strong as the other four though. The big issue that I have with the first four albums, is that whilst being very good are not as great as they are often made out to be. I think if all the best parts of the first four albums were condensed into just two albums, they would be amongst two of the best albums of all time. Probably my favourite song by them and one of the most overlooked as well. Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers ~ Luna - YouTube Meat Loaf- Now you just had to have Meatloaf didn't ya? ![]() I see that you have a section of Bruce Dickenson comin up, looking forward to that.
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Power Metal Pounding Decibels- A Hard and Heavy History |
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